Cameron, Evan Wm.2019-05-082019-05-081968http://hdl.handle.net/10315/36204With the release of THE BIRTH OF A NATION in 1915, David Griffith established by common consent and emulation of his peers the prototype of international feature filmmaking – an exemplar of the possibilities of practice within a natural art. A year later he completed INTOLERANCE, the film that was to entice a young Russian, Vsevolod Pudovkin, to explain what was going on and thus complete the paradigm. Within this essay (the second of two devoted to Griffith's achievement), I concentrate upon the unprecedented patterning of the screen times that he allotted to the supposed 'four stories' of INTOLERANCE, a seldom noted but remarkable foreshadowing of the strategies of the documentary tradition.enAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 CanadaAgee, JamesAntonioni, MichelangeloBarna, YonBiographyBIRTH OF A NATION, THEBrownlow, KevinDirectingDwan, AllanEisenstein, SergeiFilm Form and Film SenseFilmmakingFilmmaking, DocumentaryFilmmaking, Russian and SovietGance, AbelGeduld, Harry M.Golden MeanGriffith, David WarkHearing MoviesHistoryHuff, TheodoreINTOLERANCELevaco, RonLeyda, JayMusicNarrativeNaturalismPudovkin, VsevolodRealismRED DESERTScreenwritingScreenwriting, History ofScreenwriting, Teaching ofStroheim, EricZukor, AdolphCameron, EvanThe Exemplary Practices of David Griffith, Part 2: INTOLERANCE – 'A Drama of Comparisons'Presentation